The idea of Brexit resurfacing as an issue might well be one that keeps Starmer awake at night. Yet the prospect that the issue of the UK’s relationship with Europe has not been resolved.. critical mass of the electorate could support rejoining the European Union.. a long-term benefit to Labour.
One of the tendencies shared both by generals and British political
leaders is to fight the last war. The classic mistake is to think that
the next election will be determined by the same dynamics as the last.
This can be the result of wishful thinking: Rishi Sunak clearly wishes
he had the good fortune of his predecessor-but-one in facing Jeremy
Corbyn. It can also be the result of fear: having been at the centre of a
series of bracing defeats over the last decade, Keir Starmer and his
team are determined not to make the same mistakes.
It is this fear of history repeating itself that has driven the
Labour Party’s approach to Brexit under Keir Starmer. The knowledge that
Brexit, and the promise to ‘get it done’, helped the Conservative Party
in December 2019 means the party has been determined not to give their
opponents any opening to suggest the party is flirting with
substantially reopening the question of the UK’s relationship with the
EU.
The idea of Brexit resurfacing as an issue might well be one that
keeps Starmer awake at night. Yet the prospect that the issue of the
UK’s relationship with Europe has not been resolved, and a critical mass
of the electorate could in time support rejoining the European Union,
is also a long-term benefit to Labour. After all, if a substantially
closer relationship with Europe becomes a key demand of the British
electorate, they are the only party in the market to lead a government
who could supply it.
This tension between the short and the long-term for Labour is clear
when you look under the hood at the opinion polling in the UK on Brexit.
Our research at UK in a Changing Europe has found a surge in support
for rejoining the EU, from 45% in February to 57% in October. This
evidence, which corroborates recent poling showing increasing ‘Bregret’,
has come principally from the voting groups that have trended to the
Labour Party in the last decade: those with a degree, and those under
50. All age groups under 45 support rejoining by over 70%. There is
roughly 30% gap in support for rejoin between those without a degree
(40%) and those with one (70%).
If this increase in support for rejoin gathers further momentum (and
it remains an if, given none of our main or small political parties are
advocating such a move) then the source of that momentum, a growing
divide between young and old, and graduates and non-graduates, would
pose a problem for Starmer. Among those who backed Labour in 2019,
support for rejoin has risen from 65% to 83%, while it has gone up from
24% to 30% among Conservative voters. Starmer’s strategy is predicated
on winning back voters who are simply much less likely to think Brexit
is at the nub of the UK’s economic woes.
As a result, in the short-term, it is likely to make sense for
Starmer to ignore the growing feeling both that Brexit was a mistake and
that it should be reversed. However, the evidence suggests Labour could
reach a tipping point in the next decade where ambivalence on Europe
becomes unsustainable. At that stage, for Labour, Brexit will become a
weapon to be utilised rather than a problem to be neutralised.
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